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History
in a Pecan Shell
The area was settled
in the late 1860s, although things didn't really get going until the
International-Great Northern Railroad came through in 1872 and made
this stop on their line "Jarvis Switch." Growth was non-existant
to slow until 1897 when truck farmer J. W. Melton relocated from Troup,
Texas and started shipping tomatoes. A post office was granted
in 1898 as "Strawberry, Texas" but this name only lasted a
year. It was renamed for a newspaper editor named William Arp. (See
Naming Arp by Bob Bowman)
By 1902 Arp had three churches, no fewer than five general stores,
a drugstore and physician. Arp grew as a vegetable and fruit shipping
point for area farmers and became the postal connection for Omen,
Texas when their post office closed in 1906.
By 1914 the town had a population of nearly 400. Omen,
Texas continued to decline and even their Masonic lodge moved
to Arp. In 1931 oil was discovered and Arp became the headquarters
for The McMurry Refining Company. The population reached it's high-water
mark in the mid 1930s with 2,500 citizens but as the Great Depression
wound down, so did the population - reaching about 1,000 by the end
of the decade. It was still at that level in the 1960s, even though
the number of businesses had declined by half. In 1989 there were
just over 1,000 residents which declined to 812 by 1990.
by Bob Bowman
Few towns have a name as simple and short as Arp, which sits on a
railroad line and Texas Highway 135 eighteen miles southeast of Tyler
in Smith County... How Arp got its name remains a mystery of sorts...
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Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and recent or vintage photos, please contact
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